Anonymous wrote:You can always open a new Vanguard account.
You can buy Treasuries at auction and hold to maturity with no risk. You can also get bank issued CDs. These are buy/sell transactions on the dashboard.
Anonymous wrote:Trusts can be very complicated. My husband and I have set up irrevocable generation skipping trusts but we have investment accounts set up a 2-3 firms such as Fidelity with those investment titled under the trust names and dates. It's easy if you are the trustee of a trust. If a bank is the trustee of the trust that can make things very complicated if the trust'a goal is to be income producing which limits your options. My mother was the beneficiary of a trust where the trustee was a bank that ended up being sold a bunch of times and it was impossible to make any changes until we got a lawyer involved who had to prove to the state that the trust wasn't being well managed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your parent have an investment portfolio? If so, given that the money has no earmarked purpose in the near-term, why not just invest the money according to how the rest of the portfolio is invested? For example, if you parent's portfolio is 60/40 stocks/bonds, just invest the money the same way. It is all one big pot of money. If there is separate money available with no specific use, it really doesn't make sense to treat it differently.
They do. In bullet 3, I mentioned that I can't put it into the brokerage account because it's not in the trust. I also can't make changes to that account on my own and have to go through a financial advisor. Very odd to me since I do Vanguard on my own.
I was considering opening a new account at Vanguard that would be opened in the trust's name. A lawyer told me the money needs to stay as "trust money."
OP
Why and how are you getting the money in fits and starts if it's in a trust? I assume you have to wait for your parent to pass away....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your parent have an investment portfolio? If so, given that the money has no earmarked purpose in the near-term, why not just invest the money according to how the rest of the portfolio is invested? For example, if you parent's portfolio is 60/40 stocks/bonds, just invest the money the same way. It is all one big pot of money. If there is separate money available with no specific use, it really doesn't make sense to treat it differently.
They do. In bullet 3, I mentioned that I can't put it into the brokerage account because it's not in the trust. I also can't make changes to that account on my own and have to go through a financial advisor. Very odd to me since I do Vanguard on my own.
I was considering opening a new account at Vanguard that would be opened in the trust's name. A lawyer told me the money needs to stay as "trust money."
OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your parent have an investment portfolio? If so, given that the money has no earmarked purpose in the near-term, why not just invest the money according to how the rest of the portfolio is invested? For example, if you parent's portfolio is 60/40 stocks/bonds, just invest the money the same way. It is all one big pot of money. If there is separate money available with no specific use, it really doesn't make sense to treat it differently.
They do. In bullet 3, I mentioned that I can't put it into the brokerage account because it's not in the trust. I also can't make changes to that account on my own and have to go through a financial advisor. Very odd to me since I do Vanguard on my own.
I was considering opening a new account at Vanguard that would be opened in the trust's name. A lawyer told me the money needs to stay as "trust money."
OP
Anonymous wrote:Does your parent have an investment portfolio? If so, given that the money has no earmarked purpose in the near-term, why not just invest the money according to how the rest of the portfolio is invested? For example, if you parent's portfolio is 60/40 stocks/bonds, just invest the money the same way. It is all one big pot of money. If there is separate money available with no specific use, it really doesn't make sense to treat it differently.